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Municipal Waste Concert Tickets

Municipal Waste is a crossover thrash band from Richmond, Virginia formed in 2001. They are known for their loud, drunken, party atmosphere and rowdy show attendees, and also for their humorous thrash oriented parody song titles. Occasionally, they have been known to play unscheduled shows late at night. Check our available Municipal Waste concert ticket inventory and get your tickets here at ConcertBank now. Sign up for an email alert to be notified the moment we have tickets!


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Municipal Waste Reviews

Avg. Customer Rating:
5.0 (based on 9 reviews)

Sound: Being two of the most respected metal bands of today, Municipal Waste and Toxic Holocaust joined forces in 2012 and came up with this 4-track split EP, "Toxic Waste". The first two songs being by Municipal Waste ("Trapped In The Sites", "Mourning Sex") and the other two by Toxic Holocaust ("We Bring 'Em Hell" and "Altar-ed States"). The whole EP runs at less than 10 minutes, so you can't really make a long review of this...
- www.ultimate-guitar.com
Sound: One of the most respected thrash metal bands of today, Municipal Waste is back, in 2012, with "The Fatal Feast" (or "The Fatal Feast: Waste In Space", if you prefer). Well, if you're already into Municipal Waste, your expectations will probably be fulfilled. After a brief intro, you'll receive 37 minutes of some fine metal...
- www.ultimate-guitar.com
Release Date: April 10, 2012 Some things never change. Like a particular favorite dish from a favorite restaurant or a choice beverage, some things are always there, always reliable; never disappointing. Thrash-punk golden boys Municipal Waste are one such example. Record after record, song after song, the Richmond Virginia metal outfit has consistently churned out short and to the point metal jams, all delivered with tongue firmly inserted in cheek...
- absolutepunk.net
Sound: First full-lenght album by Municipal Waste, released in 2003. This album is just crazy crossover crushing everything in its path. This lasts less than 20 minutes and got 16 songs. The longest song on the album is the last song, a hidden, untitled track, running at 2:09, so I think you know what you can expect here. This remembers me of D.R.I.'s first albums, but more thrash-oriented...
- www.ultimate-guitar.com
Summary: Good friendly violent crossover fun in store for all. 10 of 10 thought this review was well written Exodus described aptly the aesthetics of being caught in a thrash mosh pit in their all time classic anthem "Toxic Waltz" published in 1989. Good friendly violent fun in store of all. In the case of Municipal Waste this punch line is automatically translated to good friendly violent crossover fun in store for all...
- www.sputnikmusic.com
The Fatal Feast is Municipal Waste's fifth album. If they had gone the direction of Megadeth, the band's countdown to thrash extinction would have just begun. If they had followed Metallica, they would have ditched metal entirely. Fortunately, the sandman hasn't entered for these Virginia crossover thrashers just yet; they're more akin to Slayer ? five albums deep and still thrashing at the top of their game...
- exclaim.ca
"It's all so hectic it makes you feel massive aggressive." Playing on the term "passive aggressive," Municipal Waste's "Massive Aggressive" is just as frantic as it sounds. The thirteen thrashy tracks, the longest song lasting three minutes and one second, take the listener on a trip to the past in a sweet '89 Firebird. The gang choruses will force you to growl along and the drums create the beat to head bang by. Not every track is a blazing fast, though. Some merely move at 200 mph...
- www.metalunderground.com
Sound: From the opening chords to the final scream, Municipal Wastes newest album is relentless, unleashing 13 rapid songs in under a half hour. The machine gun drums and heavy guitar riff's combined with Foresta's assaulting but harmonic yells is enough to get everyone in the room air drumming and head banging, complete with a mean sneer. Waste doesn't stray far from their previous sound, but songs such as "The Wrath Of The Severed Head" and "Media Skeptic" do have a punk rock influence...
- www.ultimate-guitar.com
Sound: Keeping with the late '80s styled production values of their influences, Municipal Waste elect to go for a very mid-level guitar tone on their newest album. The sound instantly reminds you of D.R.I. and the albums they made for Metal Blade. Since guitarist Ryan Waste rarely takes a proper solo, the straight forward tones work extremely well within the context of the songs...
- www.ultimate-guitar.com
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